The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Patterson's presence

Transfer QB will continue to make Wolverines’ offense difficult.

- By JuliaKate E. Culpepper juliakate.culpepper@ajc.com

The greatest decision that quarterbac­k Shea Patterson said he’s made on his own is transferri­ng to Michigan.

Patterson, a quarterbac­k for Ole Miss from 2016-17, transferre­d to Michigan in December 2017 in wake of Ole Miss’ self-imposed postseason ban resulting from an NCAA investigat­ion that uncovered several violations and controvers­y surroundin­g former coach Hugh Freeze.

His decision to leave Ole Miss resulted in Patterson leading his team to a bowl game for the first time in his collegiate career.

In the midst of preparatio­ns for Saturday’s Chick-fil-A Peach Bowl game against Florida, Patterson added to the excitement of playing in a New Year’s Six Bowl by announcing he would return to Michigan for his senior season — a decision he said he made long before last weekend’s announceme­nt.

“Just being at Michigan, it’s a special place,” Patterson said of why he chose to return. “Just being here with these guys and just a really good team full of good dudes and just getting a taste of a full season with guys I really like.”

Patterson’s decision was influenced greatly by this being his first full season playing colle-

giate football. In 2016, Ole Miss coaches intended to redshirt Patterson, but an injury to starter Chad Kelly forced them to play Patterson and start the remaining three games of the season. In 2017, Patterson started at quarterbac­k, but played in only seven games before he sustained a season-ending knee injury against LSU.

Patterson recovered from that knee injury and recorded 2,364 passing yards, 21 touchdowns, five intercepti­ons and a careerhigh completion percentage of 64.8 percent in his first season with Michigan.

“He’s been great at getting better at everything,” Michigan coach Jim Harbaugh said. “He’s an ascending player. It’s just everything you ask him to do, he’s got the athletic ability to go out and do it. He’s really serious about being good. He’s so focused at practice and he’s the type of player that you can give a coaching point to and he gets it and practices and improves on it.”

Patterson’s seriousnes­s “about being good” can easily be seen in how his presence has improved Michigan’s offense since his arrival.

Michigan is on the cusp of an 11-win season after an 8-5 record last season. Having Patterson under center has enhanced Michigan’s passing game and execution in the red zone. Michigan has averaged 11 more points and 41.6 more passing yards per game as well as 14 more passing touchdowns on the season. The Wolverines also increased their number of red-zone trips from 44 to 55 and scored on 11 more possession­s inside the red zone than they did last season.

But Patterson’s arm isn’t the main focus for Florida’s defense — his legs are.

After watching video and breaking down Patterson’s tendencies, Florida’s defense knows limiting him will be a large part of the challenge it faces Saturday.

“Anytime there’s 11 guys out there and all 11 can run, it’s much better when that one guy out there has to play static,” Florida defensive coordinato­r Todd Grantham said. “What happens is in the run game, if he’s not a threat, then it’s really 11 guys on 10 because you really don’t have to account for the guy. In the pass game, you can collapse the pocket and he can’t extend plays with his feet and a guy that’s athletic like that can extend plays and buy time for guys to get open down the field.”

This season, Patterson rushed for 268 yards and two touchdowns this season, averaging 4.1 yards per carry.

“Shea Patterson’s going to take off. He’s going to run,” Florida defensive lineman Cece Jefferson said. “We just have to do a good job of making sure we can set the edge and contain him, making him play just quarterbac­k, not running back and quarterbac­k.”

Although Saturday will be the first time the former SEC quarterbac­k will face the Gators’ defense, Patterson has faced Florida coach Dan Mullen before, in 2016 when Mullen was coach at Mississipp­i State.

“I’ve faced him before, I don’t know if that is good or bad, when he was quarterbac­k at Ole Miss,” Mullen said this week. “He’s a very talented quarterbac­k, has a great arm, makes reads, stays in the pocket and delivers the ball, but the thing to me that really makes him even more difficult to defend is when he starts to improvise. ... Where he drops back, you get a good rush and we have the route covered and now he takes off and starts making things happen, and that is one of the things that makes him very difficult to defend.”

 ?? GREGORY SHAMUS / GETTY IMAGES ?? Michigan quarterbac­k Shea Patterson leaves the field in East Lansing, Mich., after his Wolverines defeated their rivals Michigan State 21-7 on Oct. 20.
GREGORY SHAMUS / GETTY IMAGES Michigan quarterbac­k Shea Patterson leaves the field in East Lansing, Mich., after his Wolverines defeated their rivals Michigan State 21-7 on Oct. 20.
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